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Environmental Concerns for Coastal Zones. Essential Questions. What are the issues for Coastal Zones in NS? What are the pollutants effecting coastal zones? What is sustainability?. What are the issues for Coastal Zones in NS?. As reported in The State of Nova Scotia’s Coast Report 2009.
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Essential Questions • What are the issues for Coastal Zones in NS? • What are the pollutants effecting coastal zones? • What is sustainability?
What are the issues for Coastal Zones in NS? As reported in The State of Nova Scotia’s Coast Report 2009
Issues raised by Nova Scotians include: • increased development and more intensive human use of land in coastal areas • degraded habitats and loss of biodiversity, which is the number and variety of plants and animals within an area • unsustainable harvesting of resources • increased land-based pollution • loss of traditional access to the coast • non-resident ownership of coastal properties • poor water quality • uncoordinated legislation • sea level rise and flooding
6 Priorities 1. Coastal Development • to identify the extent and distribution of coastal development, both rural and urban 2. Working Waterfronts • to examine the status of sites, facilities, and related infrastructure that provide physical access to the sea for ocean-dependent uses and businesses to examine the status of communities that depend economically on such waterfronts 3. Public Coastal Access • to examine the ability of the public to reach, use, or view the shoreline of coastal waters or nearby islands 4. Sea Level Rise and Storm Events • to examine the factors that determine sea level rise in Nova Scotia • to examine the social, economic, and ecological implications of the hazards associated with sea level rise and storm events 5. Coastal Water Quality • to describe the factors that influence the physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of Nova Scotia’s coastal waters • to determine the extent to which water quality conditions influence the uses of coastal waters 6. Sensitive Coastal Ecosystems and Habitats • to examine the range of coastal ecosystems and habitats that are sensitive to human influences
Coastal Development • Within high-density urban areas, most development is strip-like. It extends along the shorelines of the coast, including bays, rivers, and estuaries. • This type of development pattern has a high potential for affecting the coastal environment because it may interrupt natural connections between land and sea. • Eighty per cent of the two km-wide coastal land strip has little or no development, while 11 per cent has intensely developed urban and industrial areas. • The most densely developed coastal areas are associated with ports and harbours. • These include service centres such as Halifax, Antigonish, Yarmouth, and the New Glasgow and Sydney areas.
Working Waterfronts Types and numbers of working waterfronts • TYPE A Canada Port Authority ports • Halifax is the only one in the province. It is operated by Halifax Port Authority but is overseen by Transport Canada. • TYPE B Local and regional ports • There are 25 of these ports, such as Mulgrave Marine Terminal, Strait of Canso. They are managed by harbour authorities, which are either private corporations or municipalities. • TYPE C Small craft harbours • There are 247 small craft harbours, such as Clark’s Harbour. They are managed mainly by community or private groups called Small Craft Harbour Authorities.
Types of working waterfront communities • Type 1 Healthy • These communities are well-off and demographically strong, such as Musquodoboit Harbour, HRM in 2006. • Type 2 Transitional • These communities are moderately well-off but show a significant decline in population. In 2006, no communities were in transition. For example, LaHave, Lunenburg County rose from transitional to healthy from 1991 to 2006. • Type 3 Declining • These communities are less well-off and are showing a significant decline in population, such as Weymouth, Digby County in 2006. • TYPE 4 Other • Eskasoni, Cape Breton, is a community that doesn’t fit in with the other classification types. It was not well-off but showed a significant increase in population in 2006.
Public Coastal Access • Public coastal access is about people’s ability to view, reach, and move along the shoreline of the mainland and islands of • Nova Scotia. Economic, legislative, or physical barriers can contribute to the loss of this ability. For example, barriers to access can be the high price of coastal property or laws that protect the rights of private property owners. Physical barriers can be created by weather, terrain, or structures. Access to the coast has changed significantly over time, mostly because of shifting land-use patterns and property ownership. • The government promotes coastal access in other ways, such as by having public wilderness trails, parks, protected areas, and tourist sites. Crown land, which is a public asset, may also provide access. Unfortunately, free access to the coast isn’t always guaranteed because there are often restrictions within these public areas. • Approximately 1,500 km of coastal frontage is owned by the federal, provincial, or municipal governments – in other words, publicly owned. • The rest is privately owned and isn’t legally accessible to the public without permission from land owners.
Sea Level Rise • Sea level is rising long term in Atlantic Canada for a combination of reasons. • These include a general rise in average sea level since the last ice age, regional subsidence, or sinking of land relative to the sea, and global warming associated with climate change. • in Halifax water level readings already show a relative sea level increase of 30 cm per century, mainly due to land subsidence. • Nova Scotia will see a total rise of 70 to 140 cm over the next century
Sea Level Rise:Storm Surges • The phenomenon of storm surge is particularly important, because it causes waves to pile water onshore, creating a higher possibility of damage. • Storm surges occur when seawater is driven onshore by a storm’s high winds and low pressure. • The highest storm surges tend to occur along the province’s Northumberland Shore, along western Cape Breton, and at the head of the Bay of Fundy. • The areas at greatest risk include • areas that are low lying, such as Acadian dykelands • areas with frequent storm conditions and high storm-surge potential • areas with coastal infrastructure and property • areas of sensitive ecology • areas of rapid coastal erosion
Coastal Water Quality Examples of human-created impacts to water quality can include • municipal discharge from wastewater treatment plants • failing domestic septic systems • industrial discharge • petroleum-refining wastes • nutrient loading from fish processing plants, aquaculture operations, and farms • sediments from land-based activities such as forestry and agriculture • heat-generating wastes • mining wastes • dredging • ocean dumping • ballast water discharged from ships • activities by shipyards • activities by the offshore oil and gas industry
Coastal Water Quality continued • Monitoring is undertaken to ensure waters are safe for a variety of users or because the areas have known contamination or the potential for contamination. • These include public beaches, shellfish harvesting regions, and waters showing increased algal blooms. • If we examine the closures of public beaches, we can find evidence of poor water quality. • Restricted harvesting in shellfish areas is an indicator of poor coastal water quality in Nova Scotia. Between 1985 and 2000, the number of closures has doubled. • We can determine another important water quality problem in the unwanted growth of algae.
Eyes of Nye: Global Climate Change • http://learning.aliant.net/Player/ALC_Player.asp?ProgID=DEP_EON07 • Complete the Question sheet provided while watching. • 24mins
Types of Pollutants • Bacteria and viruses (pathogens). • Oxygen-depleting substances such as sewage, other carbon-based waste, and dissolved carbon-based material, • Toxic substances such as: • Heavy metals, especially in carbon-based compounds: • Arsenic • Cadmium • Cobalt • Copper • Lead • Mercury, especially methyl mercury • Manganese • Tin • Selenium • Zinc • Uranium • Industrial waste products such as polychlorinated biphenyls • Toxic carbon-based compounds (herbicides, pesticides)
Types of Pollutants continued • Nutrients (nitrates, phosphates), • Hot water discharge from power plants, • Alien species, such as the European Green Crab and the aquatic weed Carcinus maenas on the US west coast. • Litter. There are three types: • Monofilament fishing line, fishing nets, and tackle. • Abandoned fishing boats, docks, and structures. • Small objects, including plastic rings used to hold 6-packs of cold drinks, cigarette butts, and tires. • Noise, especially noise that interferes with marine mammals and other animals communications and hearing.
combined sewer overflows sewers that are designed to collect rainwater runoff, domestic sewage, and industrial wastewater in the same pipe combined sewer systems are designed to overflow occasionally and discharge excess wastewater directly to nearby streams, rivers, or other water bodies concentrated animal feeding operations agricultural operations where animals are kept and raised in confined situations sanitary sewer overflows storm water when precipitation from rain and snowmelt events flows over land or impervious surfaces and does not percolate into the ground it accumulates debris, chemicals, sediment or other pollutants that could adversely affect water quality if the runoff is discharged untreated oil spills industrial discharges discharge from boats, and dumping of ballast water from ships Point Sources of Pollution Point sources generally enter receiving water bodies at some identifiable site(s) and carry pollutants whose generation is controlled by some internal process or activity, rather than weather.
Non-Point Sources of Pollution • Runoff from farm lands and managed forests in the coastal zone that carry fertilizer, excess nutrients, pesticides and herbicides, salts in irrigation water, and crop residues. • Runoff from agricultural areas (excluding concentrated animal feeding operations) that carries nutrients, animal wastes, manure, and pathogens (bacteria and viruses). • Runoff from coastal cities that carry trash, litter, heavy metals, carbon-based chemicals such as oil from highways, fertilizer and pet waste from backyards and sidewalks, and detergent (the most common pollutant). • Acid mine drainage. • Hydromodification. Three major types of hydromodification activities change a waterbody's physical structure as well as its natural function. These changes can cause problems such as changes in flow, increased sedimentation, higher water temperature, lower dissolved oxygen, degradation of aquatic habitat structure, loss of fish and other aquatic populations, and decreased water quality. The changes are: • Channelization and channel modification, including cutting new channels through barrier islands, or closing such channels. • Dams. • Stream bank and shoreline erosion. Nonpoint source pollution generally results from land runoff, precipitation, atmospheric deposition, drainage, seepage, or hydrologic modification.
Non-Point Sources of Pollution continued • Marinas and boating facilities. • Atmospheric deposition of sediments and chemicals carried by the wind. • Mercury in water comes mostly from the atmosphere. • 55% of mercury emissions are natural, from volcanoes and forest fires. • 42% are man made outside the USA. • 1% come from US power plant emissions. • Under some conditions, excess sand, silt, and clays (sediments) eroded from land, especially land denuded of plants that hold sediments. Mostly, sediments are needed by the coastal zone. Excess sediments that bury plants, or sediments in water that is historically sediment free, such as water near coral reefs, are pollutants. • Groundwater discharge which can include all types of pollutants, including water from faulty septic systems. • Solvents used to clean boats, anti-fowling agents leached from hulls. Anti-fowling agents are designed to be highly toxic to marine life that settles on to hard surfaces. • Trash dumped from ships, dropped on beaches, and washed into the ocean.
What does this mean for NS? • Sustainable use means that Nova Scotians can fulfill their needs today without affecting the ability of future generations to fulfill their own needs. • To keep this balance, we must consider that the environment, the economy, and society are all linked together.
What does this mean for NS? continued… • The idea of coastal sustainability involves not only maintaining the integrity of the natural environment, but also growing and preserving the economic and cultural aspects of these ever expanding communities.
Sustainability on a Global scale • Integrated coastal zone management (ICZM) or Integrated coastal management (ICM) • process for the management of the coast using an integrated approach, regarding all aspects of the coastal zone, including geographical and political boundaries, in an attempt to achieve sustainability • concept was born in 1992 during the Earth Summit of Rio de Janeiro
Sustainability on a Global scale continued… • three main standpoints which summarise the idea of Sustainable development are: • Economic development to improve the quality of life of people • Environmentally appropriate development • Equitable development • To simplify these points, sustainability should acknowledge the right of humans to live a life that is healthy and productive. It should allow for equal distribution of benefits to all people and in doing so protect the environment through appropriate use • four identified goals of ICZM: • Maintaining the functional integrity of the coastal resource systems; • Reducing resource-use conflicts; • Maintaining the health of the environment; • Facilitating the progress of multisectoral development